par Vanhaesebrouck, Karel
Référence Tijdschrift voor geschiedenis, 126, 4, page (516-529)
Publication Publié, 2013-11
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : This article examines physical representation of pain on the early modern stage, taking as its starting point the genre of martyr tragedy. It considers one tragedy, La Macchabie (1596) by Jean de Virey. Analysis of its dramaturgical structures and the modalities of representation of this specific genre suggest a double hypothesis: (1) martyr tragedy cannot be understood without taking into account its links with the medieval tradition of mystery plays and its broader cultural imagination, and (2) emotions and their bodily representations are historically defined categories functioning within a spe-cific performative regime. By means of their spectacular simulation of embodied emotions plays such as La Macchabee mobilized an emotional repertoire both for actor and spectator.